2 claim verifications about Artificial General Intelligence Artificial General Intelligence ×
“Jensen Huang has publicly claimed that artificial general intelligence has been achieved.”
Jensen Huang did publicly state "I think we've achieved AGI" during his March 22, 2026 appearance on the Lex Fridman podcast. This is confirmed verbatim by Forbes, Silicon Republic, Tom's Guide, TechRadar, and other independent outlets. However, Huang's claim was based on a self-defined, narrow benchmark — not the conventional definition of AGI as human-level cognition across all tasks. He also acknowledged current AI cannot replicate enduring institutions like NVIDIA, partially qualifying his own statement.
“Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) will be achieved before the year 2030.”
The claim that AGI "will be" achieved before 2030 overstates the evidence. Only about 18% of surveyed AI researchers predict AGI by 2030, and leading forecast aggregates assign roughly 25% probability to that timeline — meaning a 75% chance it won't happen. While some AI company leaders call pre-2030 AGI "plausible," plausibility is not certainty. There is also no consensus definition of AGI, making any claimed "achievement" inherently ambiguous. The claim frames a minority, probabilistic possibility as a confident prediction.